A four-star general called him the dumbest fucking guy on the planet. The general was being kind.
Douglas Feith held the number three civilian job at the Pentagon. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. Harvard College. Georgetown Law. He reported to Donald Rumsfeld. He advised the President. He had the full weight of the American defense establishment behind him. And he used it to build a small, secret office inside the Pentagon whose sole purpose was to find evidence for a war that had already been decided.
The Office of Special Plans existed from September 2002 to June 2003. Nine months. In those nine months, Feith’s shop manufactured the analytical scaffolding that sent a hundred and thirty thousand Americans into Iraq. The office did not discover intelligence. It selected the pieces that fit a predetermined conclusion and discarded everything else. George Packer, in his award-winning The Assassins’ Gate, described the methodology with surgical precision: “The premise was true; facts would be found to confirm it.” This is not analysis. This is interior decorating. You pick the wallpaper first, then build the room around it.
The Machinery
Here is how it worked. The CIA produced an assessment of the Iraq–al-Qaeda relationship. The assessment was cautious because the relationship was murky. Two days before the CIA finalized its report, Feith briefed Cheney’s and Rice’s senior advisors with an alternative assessment that undercut the CIA’s credibility and alleged “fundamental problems” with the Agency’s intelligence-gathering. One of his staff wrote that the CIA report “should be read for content only” and that the Agency’s “interpretation ought to be ignored.”
Read that again. A policy shop inside the Pentagon told the Vice President’s office to ignore the Central Intelligence Agency’s interpretation of intelligence. Not to weigh it. Not to challenge it through proper channels. To ignore it. Because the intelligence community’s conclusion—that the Iraq–al-Qaeda link was murky—was inconvenient. Murky doesn’t sell wars. Murky doesn’t fill PowerPoint slides. Murky doesn’t get you on the front page. So Feith replaced murky with certain, and certain became Colin Powell’s UN speech, and the speech became the vote, and the vote became the invasion, and the invasion became four thousand four hundred and thirty-one dead Americans and a country that burned for a decade.
Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski worked inside the Pentagon during this period. She watched it happen. She described what Feith’s office produced with the precision of a coroner: “inflammatory bits of data, cherry-picked statements, and isolated observations by often shady characters, presented as if they were vetted, contextualized and conservative intelligence.” She called it information manipulation, not intelligence production. She was a lieutenant colonel. She was right. The Under Secretary of Defense was wrong. He outranked her. Rank won. The dead lost.
The Connections
The Pentagon’s own Inspector General concluded in 2007 that Feith’s office “developed, produced, and then disseminated alternative intelligence assessments on the Iraq and al-Qaida relationship, which included some conclusions that were inconsistent with the consensus of the Intelligence Community.” Senator Carl Levin called it devastating. The IG called it “inappropriate.” A former CIA officer named Larry Johnson called it what it was: “dangerous for US national security and a threat to world peace.”
And then there’s the espionage. Lawrence Franklin, an Iran analyst in Feith’s office, was convicted of passing classified information to Israel through AIPAC. The Guardian reported that the OSP maintained an unconventional relationship with Israeli intelligence services, bypassing Mossad entirely to create a parallel conduit into Ariel Sharon’s office. Feith’s shop was not only manufacturing intelligence for one war. It was running a back channel to a foreign government while doing it.
And here is the detail that connects the entire BROKE AS FUCK series: Michael Rubin—BAF Paper No. 1—publicly defended Feith’s office in 2011, accusing Feith’s critics of cherry-picking. The man who cherry-picked intelligence to start a war was defended by a man who is now cherry-picking history to start another one. The ecosystem is intact. The personnel rotate. The methodology is identical. The body count is the only variable.
The dumbest fucking guy on the planet.
The Invoice
General Tommy Franks commanded the Iraq invasion. Two hundred and fifty thousand troops. Four stars. When asked about Feith, Franks reportedly said he was “the dumbest fucking guy on the planet.” Franks did not issue a correction. Franks did not clarify his remarks. Franks did not say he was taken out of context. Franks commanded a quarter million people in combat and then went home and described the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy with a profanity and a superlative. The profanity was earned. The superlative was generous.
Feith left the Pentagon in 2005. He wrote a memoir called War and Decision. He joined the faculty at Georgetown University, where he teaches national security strategy. The man who bypassed the intelligence community, manufactured the case for a war that killed hundreds of thousands, and ran an office where an analyst was convicted of espionage is now teaching the next generation how to think about national security. Georgetown charges sixty thousand dollars a year for this education. The students are getting a masterclass in institutional failure delivered by its architect. Whether they know it is another question.
Harvard. Georgetown. Under Secretary of Defense. Every credential the system offers. And the man could not tell the difference between intelligence and wishful thinking—or worse, he could, and he chose the thinking that produced a war. Either interpretation ends in the same place: a country in flames and a man at a lectern explaining why it wasn’t his fault.
Broke. As. Fuck.
RESONANCE
Kwiatkowski, Karen. (2007). “Former Pentagon Staff Speaks Out on Crimes of Doug Feith, Dick Cheney, and Planning of Iran War.” Let’s Try Democracy. https://davidswanson.org/former-pentagon-staff-speaks-out-on-crimes-of-doug-feith-dick-cheney-and-planning-of-iran-war/. Summary: Pentagon insider describes Feith’s Office of Special Plans as an information manipulation operation that produced inflammatory data presented as vetted intelligence.
Militarist Monitor. (2011). “Office of Special Plans.” Militarist Monitor. https://militarist-monitor.org/profile/office_of_special_plans/. Summary: Documents the OSP’s role in producing skewed intelligence and notes that Michael Rubin defended Feith’s office in 2011, accusing its critics of cherry-picking sources.
United States Senate Armed Services Committee. (2007). “Briefing on the Department of Defense Inspector General’s Report on the Activities of the Office of Special Plans Prior to the War in Iraq.” GovInfo. https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-110shrg35438/html/CHRG-110shrg35438.htm. Summary: Pentagon Inspector General confirms Feith’s office produced alternative intelligence assessments inconsistent with the Intelligence Community consensus and disseminated them to senior decision-makers without disclosing the disagreements.